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About Ashland tidings. (Ashland, Or.) 1876-1919 | View Entire Issue (March 29, 1917)
ThnrwUy, March t, 1MT ASHLAND TIDINGS PAGH THIUV 0 There's comnetiiion in tenant ; huntin-and your com- 0 J j petitors advertise 2 Classified Rates: One cent per word, flref-lnsertlon; cent per word lor each Insertion thereafter; 30 words or less f 1 per month. No advertise aient inserted for less than 25 cents. Classified ads are cash with order xoept to parties baring ledger accounts with the office. PROFESSIONAL. DR. P. A. HALL Dentistry and all Its branches. Swedenburg Bldg., Ashland, Ore. Phone 167. S-tt DR. J. J. EMMENS Physician and surgeon. Practice' limited to eye, ear, nose and throat. Glasses sup plied. Oculist and aurlst for S. P. . R. R. Offices, M. F. and H. Bldg., opposite postofflce, Medford, Ore. Phone 667. il-tf C. B. WATSON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Consulting and General Practice. Pioneer Building. Of (Ice with E. D. Brlggs. Ashland, Ore. DR. ERNEST A. WOOD Practice limited to Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat. Office hours, 10 to II and I to 6. Swedenburg Bldg., Ashland, Ore. 7 S-tt CONTRACTING AND BUILDING Frank Jordan, general contracting. New and old work; cement walks, cemetery copings, brick, cement, woodwork, lathing and plastering, cobblestone and general building contracts. 4-1 2 mo. CHAIR DOCTOR R. H 8tanley, ex pert furniture repairer and up holsterer. Carpets beat, relald and repaired, bedsprings restretched, chairs wired, rubber tires for baby buggies, window cleaning, bouse cleaning, and furniture packing done expertly. Call at I8S A street or phone 408-R. l-t CEO. T. WATSON, Painter and Pa perhanger. Phone 202-R. 1 Ohio streot. 0-tf oscKLLAircotrs BILL POSTER Will Btennett, 1H Factory St Bill posting -and dis tributee. 64-tf CHAUTAUQUA PARK CLUB. Regu lar meetings first and third Fri days of each month at 2:30 p. m. Mrs. 8. Patterson, Pres.; Mrs. Jen nle Fancett Greer. 8ec. CIVIC IMPROVEMENT CLUB. The regular meeting of the club will be held on the second and fourth Tuesdays of each month at 2:30 p. m.. at the Auxiliary Hall. FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS OREGON & CALIFORNIA RAIL ROAD CO. GRANT LANDS Title to same revested in United States by act of congress dated June 9, 1916. Two million three hundred thousand acres to be opened for settlement and sale. Power site, timber and agricultural lands, con taining some of best land left in United States, now is me uppui tune time. Large sectional map showing lanas ana ai'scimuuu eoil, climate, rainfall, elevations, -t. .,nr ii ti firnnt Land Lo- eating Co., Box 610, Portland, Ore gon. 01 f-OR SALE One centrifugal pump, capacity 400 gallons per minute; .i. inh rnnt vnlve. 14 feet buc- B1W DIA-,"V" - - - tlon pipe, unions and 40 feet of discharge pipo, new, i 1 pipe, elbows and flanges. G. Davis, ' Talent, phone 6-F-2. 81-lmo. ' fOR SALE Grain hay. L. J. Ed wards, Talent, Ore., phone n-F-ll. 87-4t TOR SALE Ono-horscpower, single phase General Eloctric motor, 110 220 volts. Inquire at shop. C street, between Second and Third. fOR SALE A good range, household furniture and chickens Inquire H. Easterly, 527 Terraco St. 88-2f TO EXCHANGE JO TRADE for an automobile, good modorn sevon-room house In Mod ford, well located. Encumbrance of $1,000 to assume. On paved street, all improvements paid. Call on William Rogers, Walker avenue, Ashland. 8-lmo. TO TRADE Ashland property for Oakland, Los Angeles or Southern California property. Address giv ing full particulars to Dox A. care of Tidings office. FOR RENT TOR RENT Nice six-room cottage, all conveniences, lots of fruit, close m,nn VInkler. 288-J. 76-tf rOR RENT Eight-room house on Nursery street; acre ground, good garden. Rent cheap. Inquire at 108 Nursery street, phone zsu-k. rOR RENT The Bungalow, for the season. See Bert R. Greer, at the Tidings office. 8B " f OR RENT My eight-room house on HIeh street, between Bush and Nob ffi waeter lights and I gas; large lot, close In. B. B Bagley. 178 BKlumm o, f"""" ' 71 i , ami anv il you warn to uu l-I Thev thine, try Tidings want aas. Tney Ho tne wort. FOUND FOUND A stickpin containing an ooal Owner can have same by calling t the Tidings office and paying for this ad. a KEATS WANTED IrFNTS WANTED for high-class ToSolYLcssity Llbera.com- mlsslon. Rapid seller Address Lacko Specialty Co., 1415 Fotoom Bt., San Francisco. 85-U inur. 8 0 WANTED WANTED Infants and children to board. Inquire 366 B street. 66-tf WANTED A gentloman to board and room at roasonnblo rates. Ap ply at 99 Granite street, near Lithla park. 76-tf WANTED Good business women to sell Nu Bone corsets In Ashland and Grants Pass. Address Mrs. A. True Lundy, District Manager, Ho tel Medford, Medford, Ore. 87-4t WANTED TO RENT Typewriter. Must be visible and with standard Keyboard. State price. Address Eleanor Dally, Talent. 88-2t SITUATION WANTED Respectable, sober single man, experienced care private grounds, horse, cow, poul try, raiso vegetables; good refer ences. Address with terms, P. O. box 261, Menlo Park, Cal. Inquire Ashland Commercial Club. 88-2t FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE AT A BARGAIN Dandy little modern four-room bungalow with acre of ground, so located as to go like hot cakes If subdivided for tourist bungalows. Will sell some good furniture to purchaser. Worth $2,000 or more. Will take 1,500 for quick sale. See Bert R. Greer, at Tidings office. FOR SALE One and a quarter acres of good ground, with two good modern houses and barn. Free wa ter for irrigation. Good fertile soil. A bargain If taken at once. Address L. R. H.. care Tidings. FOR SALE Forty acres of Irrigated alfalfa land. Address D., care Tid ings. 81-lmo. FOR SALE 4 acres 1 miles from Talnt, on the Wagner creek road. For particulars address J. Boyd Robison or phone 7-F-23. 85-8t Poultry, Pigeons, Birds, Etc. EGG8 FOR SETTING H. H. Leav itt's Barred Plymouth Rock eggs on sale at Plaza Grocery. Fifteen for 60c. 78-1 7t FOR SALE Thoroughbred White Leghorn cockerels. Suncrest Or chards, phODe 8-F-ll. 83-9t FOR SALE Eggs from winter-laying Rhode Island Reds, $1 per set ting; also White Leghorns, pure Tancrcd strain, $1.50 per setting. Mrs. W. D. Booth, 996 Oak street. Phono 291-R. 85-lmo. FOR SALE Pure bred Black Minor ca pullets. Phone 276-Y. 86-4t FOR SALE Buff Orpington eggs from very fine stocK, 7dc a setting of 15; also one very fine cockerel, reasonable. Apply 57 5th. 8S-3t FOR SALE LIVESTOCK FOR SALE Choice Swiss milch goats, bred. C. P. Good, Ashland. 78-tf FOR SALE Sound 1,350-lb. horse, single and double harness, Banner buggy, registered Jersey bull calves and a few choice females, Jersey bull for service. R. D. Sanford, lower Helman St., Ashland. 83-tf FOR SALE Four good milch cows and calves; - one registered Jersey bull, will be two years old In May, gentle and a sure breeder; one work horso, gentle to ride, will work slncile or double. J. E. Weaver, Talent, Ore. 85-tf FOR SALE OR TRADE FOR SALE OR TRADE City proper ty on Main street, six blocks from center of town; lot 75 feet front by 342 feet deop; modern nine-room house, barn and sheds; flno garden. Medford, Ore. What have you? For particulars call at Tidings of fice. 83-tf FOR SALE OR TRADE $1,600 equity in a well-located five-acre home, one mllo from Ashland post office. Good buildings, plenty water, on main road, fine view. Balance can bo paid at $15 per month. Want house and lot close In to equal value. Might assume. Address F. B , care Tidings. 83-tf LEGAL NOTICES. NOTICE TO CREDITORS In the County Court of the State of Ure - gon for tho County of Jackson. In the matter of the Estate of Joseph T. Million, decoasod. Notice is hereby given that the undersigned havo been duly ap pointed by tho County Court of the State of Oregon for the County of Jackson, and have qualified as ad ministrators of the estate of Joseph T. Million, deceased. All parties having claims against said estate are hereby notified to present the same, duly verified and with prop er vouchers, to tho undersigned at Ashland, Oregon, or at the Billings office, 41 East Main street, Ash land, Oregon, within six months from the dato of tho first publica tion of this notlco, which is March 1, 1917. WM. B. MILLION, CHAS. C. MILLION, JEFFERSON HOWARD, Administrators Estate of Joseph T. Million, deceased. 81-5t-Thur. Grants Pass Encouraged by large returns to bo made through growing beets, hopgrowers in this district are digging out hopyards and will plant beets. Besslo Eyton has blue eyes. Henry Walthall Is married. Lou-Tellegen was born in France. Charles Le Moyne served in tho Boer war. Colin Campbell, the director, is the son of a Scotch clergyman. Lillian Glsh is not married. Neith er 1b Bobby Harron nor Mae Marsh. Mary Pickford is in her early twenties and Is married to Owen Moore. Six months ago Gloria Payton of Balboa was an extra girl. Now she's playing leads. She has rplzzerlnk tura all right! Marguerite Clark was born Feb ruary 22, 1887, so you can decide for yourself as to her age. Being born on George Washington's birthday, natural she Is truthful. Lonsdale Likes Golf Harry Lonsdale, bein English, dotes on the good old game? of golf. He has plenty of opportunity to ex ercise his love for the sport, living, as he does, in Pasadena, Cal., a com munity abounding in fine links. A Few Remarks Movio misfits: Rubber collars. Movlo mysteries Smoking jackets. Slapstick comedians rush In where film stars fear to tread. Coming film actors cast their shad ows behind. A Charming Hostess Ollie KIrkby is an ardent phono graph fan, and hor stock of .records Is reputed to be worth hundreds of dollars. Her bungalow In Jackson ville, Florida, is a haven of rest and music for the players associated with her. Nothing Too Risky How would you like to take George Larkin's placs for Just one week? Larkln is the daredevil who has done all those thrilling leaps for life in the series of newspaper aaventures, "Grant, Police Reporter." Recently Larkin's director, Robert Ellis, told jhlm to prepare his will, as they were going out to take the greatest thrill of them all. They got It too. Lar ktn climbed hand over hanrf out of a 'third story window until he could grasp the crossarm of a wireless out fit. Cutting himself loose he de scribed a gigantic half elide down ward through the air, finally land- 1 ing among the branches of a tree 300 feet away, on a level with the window Trom which he had started. How A Director Punishes Motion picturo playerj. unlike .stage players, act mostly in the day time and, although In som3 Instances they aro required to work at night In cases of emergency, or fast ap proaching release date, they usually are through with their day's work around 5 o'clock in the afternoon The other day in California Harold Lockwood and Lcslio Cuneo were fill ing 'in a wait between scenes with a mitt and baseball. Lockwood miss ed a hard catch and the baseball went dangerously close to the cam era. The director looked at the two actors sternly. "If you two kids are not nioro careful I will well, I'll keep you working late." Harold and Leslie retired to another part of the lot where thoy would not interfere with any cameras. Had Dial With Hands But Jumped Queerly Florence La Badie, Thanhouser star, had just come into tho Grand Central station, New York city, after a trying day In prison and under In quisition in the district attorney's office. It all had happened, of course at the big Thanhouser stu dios, In New Rochellle as a part of "The Girl That Wanted to Live." She had wept and pleaded and simulated such anquish that even Frederic Sullivan, her director, was struck with pity and stopped work In raid-afternoon. So Misa La Badie went to town shopping. Still in the grip of hor rough ex periences the actress sympathetical ly studied a poor foreigner at the sta tion. He was examining the wall, with puzzled dejection on his face. Miss La Badie followed hi gaze. He was observing the band of an elevator dial, and It pointed quickly to 10, 11, 12, 13. Ho turned in pain ed wondermont to Miss La Badie. "7.e time, mam'selle, mercl." As seriously as she cou'd and In her best Fronch M'ss La Badie ex plained that It wasn't a clock he was looking at and showed him her watch. tttuuuuc AT THE CHURCHES uaHMimjmwamtaimmamaajms At the Baptist church next Friday evening, the 30th, at 7:30 o'clock, Rev. F. W. Carstens of Medford will lecture on the subject, "Christian Science; Is It Christian?" You are invited First (inircli of Christ. Scientist. Pioneer avenue south. Sunday service at 11 o'clock. Subject of les son sermon, "Reality." Sunday school at 10 o'clock. Wednesday evening meeting at 8 o'clock. Read ing room open from 2 to 4 daily ex cept holidays. Methodist Church. Sunday morning communion. In the evening will be the first of the "Passion" and "Win My Chum" week services. Services each evening of the w eek, closing with Easter serv ices April 8. An urgent invitation Is extended to all who can to unite In these services. W. J. Douglass, pas tor. First Brethren. The revival sorvlces In the First Brethren church will close Thursday evening. Regular order of services on Sunday. Sunday school at 10 a. m. At this timo we shall organize a men's Bible class. All men invited. Preaching services at 11 a. m.; sub ject, "Missions." At 7:30 p. m., "The Man With Backbone." The public is cordially Invited to attend these services. C. E. Johnson, pastor. Trinity Episcopal Chnrch. Vicar, the Rev. P. K. Hammond. Services for Palm Sunday: Holy communion at 7:30 a. m.; Sunday school at 9:45; holy communion and sermon at 11; evening prayer and sermon at 7.30. Services wil be held every evening during Holy Week at 7:30 and on Good Friday from 12 to 3 p. m. Strangers and visitors cor dially welcomed. Rnptist (l)urrh. Bible school at 9:45. We are progressing. Como. Morning wor ship at 11; subject, "The Lord's Sup per." At tho close of this service I we will meet around the Lord's table. "Remember me." B. Y. P. U. at 6:30. Tho quiet ways of God's provi dence. Evening worship at 7:30; theme. "A Great Leader." Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 7:30. You. are Invited to these meetings. Whosoever will may como and re ceive a glad welcome. H. John Vine, pastor. Xnznrene Church Next Sunday morning we will take part, in the "Worldwide Hallelujah March," at which time the Pente costal Church of the Nazarene pro poses to lay $50,000 on God's altar to freo our publishing house from debt. The Sabbath school as well as the church will tako part. A short talk will be given on "Thr Nazarene Church; Its Mission in the World," after which the sacrament of tho Lord's supper will be administered. Evening subject, "What Have You In Your Hand?" Friday afternoon All Dealers Recommend Cf jf Hi fl I market today. Fisk Quality is VJM ' iflljl unexcelled and mileage returns (lil iJr prove 'i ujr a pa'r 'sk on .WJI fllilzgI Skids and put them to the dollar- --jfl V iff I K58 for-dollar value test. "When you pay l LjlPi moTe Fuk Prices yu PQy fr V-l ill r-rl something that does not exist " Don't e-JjTli III I S frset iat wen yu kuy tires " "pr,f C uer Company 11 I 1 General Offices, Chicopee Falls, Mass. "Nsj You Can Make Excellent Cake with Fewer Eggs Just use an additional quantity of Royal Baking Powder, about a teaspoon, in place of each egg omitted. This applies equally well to nearly all baked foods. Try the following recipe according to the new way: CREAM LAYER CAKE Old Way 1 enp sugar J4 cup milk 2 cup flour 2 tranpoons Royal Baking Powder 3 eggs H cup shortening 1 temtpoou flavoring Makes 1 Large 2-Layer Cake DIRECTIONS Cream the sugar and shortening together.then mix In the egg. After sifting the flour and Royal Baking Powder together two or three times, add it all to the mixture. Gradually add the milk and beat with spoon until you have a smooth pour batter. Add the flavoring. Pour Into greased layer cake tint end bake In a moderately hot oven for twenty minutes. This cake Is best baked in two layers. Put together with cream falling and spread with white icmg MOTAL BAKING POWDER made from Cream of Tartar, derived from grapes. No Alum No Phosphate prayer meeting at Mrs. Poffloy's reel- j During the night he was In a serl dence on Oak street. Ail evening ' ous condition, tho drug evidently be- servlces on and after April 1 will be one-halt hour later. You ere Invited to all our services. Dorman D. Ed wards, pastor.' Drugged and Robbed on Train To be drugged and robbed was the misfortune which befell Garlis Green of Roseburg Sunday night. He had been in Klamath Falls for a short time and on his return he met a stranger on the train, who invited him to eat a bite with him. Mr. Greon agreed and ate a number of dry cookies, chocolate and other things which might Induce thirst. He called for a drink of water, but the strangor offered him a bottle to drink from. After the first drink Mr. Green says ho knew nothing. He was removed from thft train at Grants Pass tnd taken to a hospital. Growes&Benarct . . n Highest Prices Paid for .IlinEf RllVPi'C Hides. Pelts and Wool PHONE New Way 1 cup sugar 1 cup milk 2 cupa flour 4 teaspoons Royal Baking Powder 1 egg 2 tablespoons shortening 1 teaspoon flavoring Ing very powerful. Monday morn ing he was ablo to resume his trip home. A numbor of bills and soma silver money amounting to about $25 was taken from his person. The Utah-Idaho Sugar Company will use 400.000 foot of lumber 1 building beet-loading stations In the Rogue River valley. The acreaga will bo four times that planted In 1916. Flour. Feed and Poultry Supplies A Full Line Ashland Fruit and Produce Association 253 Fourth St., Ashland, Ore. r